Don't leave us in suspense. Did the "New Jack City" soundtrack help your friend recover from his paralysis?
Don't leave us in suspense. Did the "New Jack City" soundtrack help your friend recover from his paralysis?
Lord help me, but shouting "BITCHES" at the end of an eloquent or incongruous word, phrase or sentence is pretty much a guaranteed laugh line.
Right, that much I knew. But there's no hyphen in that.
Here's a random question: why the hyphen in "Death's-Head?" Was Dachau commonly known as "Death's-Head?"
Nice prose, Mr. Serling.
I enjoyed "The Midnight Sun," but it's also one of the few episodes that actually has me rolling my eyes at the heading. My reaction was pretty similar to Zack's: OK, it's been oppressively hot the whole time, except it's actually really cold. It's sort of "The Scary Door" version of a "Twilight Zone" twist.
I was born in Florida and went to college there. What's so difficult living in a place like that is not so much the heat or humidity of any individual day. It's the day-in, day-out, month-in, month-out monotonous unpleasantness of the whole experience. It's a series of hammer blows that just go on and on. Florida…
It's silly to react like this, but I'm glad Zack liked "Deaths-Head Revisited." It's an absolutely incredible episode, as good an episode of this show as you can hope to see.
He was in "Burn Notice" a few years ago. As I recall he was a douchey bad guy, then got killed by the truly frightening bad guy.
HIJACK!
And then Wilt had sex with you?
I wonder how our reviewers are going to treat "Death's-Head Revisited," which is one of the most moralistic, heavy-handed, preachy episodes in the show's history and almost certainly one of its greatest.
It's ODD, certainly (I'm not shouting, I just don't know how to use italics here), especially considering that they used Hitler and (even more relevantly) Kruschev. But this is just one of those things that isn't going to bother me, both because it's obviously supposed to be Castro and the exact identity of the…
My, but I disagree on "The Mirror." Is "power corrupts idealistic men and drives them to brutal actions and brutal ends" a particularly unique or unexplored aesop? No, but then there really aren't a lot of unexplored aesops left, and there weren't even when The Twilight Zone was airing. It's still a message that has…
Yes, that was my point. The only time anyone puts a seat belt on is when Phillip knows he's going to intentionally crash the car. The guy who picked up the kids didn't wear a seatbelt, the kids didn't wear seatbelts and we know for sure that Phillip didn't wear one for most of the drive because we see him put it on…
Today's "It's The 80's, Guys" moment: no one wears their damn seat belt.
This was an odd episode. It seemed abrupt and out of character, and not in a "Look how different things are" kind of way.
I was amused to realize that I had a difficult decision to make between which one of "The Americans" and "Psych" I was going to watch at the normal time and which one I was going to watch later on replay. Slight tonal shift there.
Yep, Psych is back. And so are Kevin's bizarrely dour reviews, at least temporarily. It's the return of a glorious Wednesday night tradition!
This is a rather pig-headed statement, isn't it?